Death to Traders: Bernie plans Financial Transaction Tax on Wallstreet Speculation

So in a fantastical scenario, like all the various foreign entities we owe decided to coordinate their repayment demands, "making it all due and at once", we could in fact sell... oh, never mind, never going to happen.
I don't know what planet you're living on, but sovereign debt defaults happen all the time. It doesn't involve some vast coordinated conspiracy. If you were a trader, you would know this...
 
We need capital moving freely to it's highest and best use. A transaction tax is just another impediment, just like the bailouts were, in preventing capital moving to where it needs to go.

The result is less effective price signals and slower economic growth. All while we pile up trillions more debt. Brilliant.
 
That 'impossible' scenario has happened literally almost a thousand times in the past 800 years.
http://www.reinhartandrogoff.com/

Anyway, this a thread about Bernie and his transaction tax. Which Im sure you support. Because you don't trade.
That refers to sovereign defaults. I'm saying it's impossible the hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of foreign entities who have purchased US bonds, could coordinate their demand for payment (a logistical impossibility) and could ignore the fact that their bonds matures in, for best example 30 years, not today. It will never happen. And if it did, we could print money and hand it to them. But it will never happen.
 
That refers to sovereign defaults. I'm saying it's impossible the hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of foreign entities who have purchased US bonds, could coordinate their demand for payment (a logistical impossibility) and could ignore the fact that their bonds matures in, for best example 30 years, not today. It will never happen. And if it did, we could print money and hand it to them. But it will never happen.

No one has to coordinate anything. All that would have to happen is a general loss of faith in US denominated debt. If everyone sold Treasuries, rates would rise and the interest payments on new debt would force the scenario you're talking about.
 
That refers to sovereign defaults. I'm saying it's impossible the hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of foreign entities who have purchased US bonds, could coordinate their demand for payment (a logistical impossibility) and could ignore the fact that their bonds matures in, for best example 30 years, not today. It will never happen. And if it did, we could print money and hand it to them. But it will never happen.
You're right. That would never happen. But that's not how a sovereign default works. Bond holders look at the price of their bonds. As sovereigns amass more debt, bond holders slowly lose their risk appetite - fear of not getting paid back. Buyers push back from the table > bond prices drop > yields jump sharply > causing interest on rolled over debt to surge > which further results in more selling. Vicious cycle. Nobody coordinates anything. Debt holders simply look at the price of the debt, see it collapsing and their capital wiped out, much like an underwater stock trade. So they throw in the towel and cut their losses. That's it. Then, next month, country xyz can't make bond payments because interest carry costs on the debt consume half their budget = default. I don't understand why this is so hard to understand?
 
No one has to coordinate anything. All that would have to happen is a general loss of faith in US denominated debt. If everyone sold Treasuries, rates would rise and the interest payments on new debt would force the scenario you're talking about.
Thank you.
 
No one has to coordinate anything. All that would have to happen is a general loss of faith in US denominated debt. If everyone sold Treasuries, rates would rise and the interest payments on new debt would force the scenario you're talking about.
Yes, I was thinking of including that point, but didn't see why I should arm achilles.

Still impossible, we are so far from being considered that unreliable (notwithstanding rep efforts to change that) that foreign investors would never do it en masse. They could have done it several times in decades past, when our debt load to foreigners was even higher, and didn't. And interest rates have a long way to go.
 
Bernie is GREAT on many issues. He's equally horrible on a few, choice others.

Notably:

- pro-amensty
- increase the estate tax to 65%.
- increase the top marginal tax rate to 90%!!!!!
- increase capital gains tax and dividend income tax
- financial transaction tax of 50 cents on every 100$ in stock trades.
- pro-carbon taxes / anti-fossil fuels.
- 6% income tax hike on business, and 2% hike on individuals.
- Socialized healthcare / single-payer system.

His socialized medicine/single-payer system is estimated to cost an additional 1.5 TRILLION DOLLARS A YEAR, ALONE (15 Trillion over 10 years....).


Everything else, he's amazing. Anti-free trade agreement. Anti-offshoring. Pro-American middle class. Pro-jobs. Wants to invest trillions in infrastructure. Anti-NSA surveillance. Anti-Iraq War. Anti-H1B visas. Seems to be leaning towards border security. Pro-Glass Steagall.

Bernie and Trump share much common ground on trade and the economy.

All the things he's "good" on won't matter one wit if he can turn America into a socialistic shithole while destroying everything that made America what it was.
 
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